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What Can Possibly Go Wrong: The "Flash Boys" Arrive In China

Tyler Durden's picture




 

In a market where the Virtus of the world have, through outright manipulation, achieved trading perfection, it’s rare than a carbon-based lifeform bests a vacuum tube. Despite the odds, humans have scored two decisive victories YTD over the machines.

One came in mid April when Colorado Springs resident Lucas Hinch took his Dell in the back alley and executed it with a handgun.

The second came later that month when China’s millions of newly-minted ‘investors’ traded so much that they literally overwhelmed the software that tracks volume on the SHCOMP. Here's what Reuters said at the time: 

The exchange's trading turnover exceeded 1 trillion yuan ($161.28 billion) for the first time on Monday, but the data could not be properly displayed because its software was not designed to report numbers that high.

 


Now, China's legions of day-trading retail investors with be forced to contend with 'slightly' more advanced software because as Reuters reports, The Flash Boys are coming:

The rapid liberalisation of Chinese derivatives markets has attracted a new breed of creative traders employing complex trading strategies that can generate quick profits - and an extra dollop of risk - in China's runaway stock boom.

 

Brokerages and fund managers are investing in mathematics whizzes and hardware, and moving servers onto trading floors to gain precious microseconds dealing in new options and futures contracts, helping China's CSI300 index become the world's most traded equity futures contract in May.

 

The introduction of new derivative products is intended to help investors hedge risk, but it also gives rise to the kind of sophisticated trading strategies that have made quick-trading "flash boys" notorious in the United States and Europe.

 

For the most part the strategies and the traders employing them are untested in China, where the derivatives market barely existed five years ago, and slick automated trading strategies can produce horrific crashes when they go wrong.

As we've been at pains to explain for years — and as the rest of the world is slowly realizing on the heels of last October's Treasury flash crash — stop-hunting, hair trigger HFT algos help create the conditions for harrowing bouts of volatility and considering the number of inexperienced (and possibly illiterate) traders that have entered the Chinese equity markets over the past several months, combined with the amount of leverage these traders have employed on the way to driving the SHCOMP to historic highs and pushing valuations on the Shenzhen to a median of 108X, it would seem that adding automated trading to the mix is just about the worst thing that could possibly happen in terms of stability. Here's more from Reuters:

The risk is amplified by a triple-digit percentage leap in the SCI. Chinese bourses have already seen three panics that have driven major indexes down about 6 percent in short order. On Thursday afternoon benchmark indexes suddenly plunged over 5 percent, wiping out 3.4 trillion yuan ($548 billion) of market value, only to turn positive again by the close.

 

(Thursday's turbulece visualized)

 

Analysts blame the new volatility on the preponderance of retail investors in the Chinese market - unlike in the West, where institutions dominate - and to the fact that many Chinese traders are highly leveraged, which tends to amplify movements.

 


("That aint no margin debt, THIS is margin debt")

As for the traders themselves, the opportunity to test can't-lose strategies in the hottest market on the planet is too enticing to resist:

That has already attracted overseas returnees like Wang Feng, a physics graduate from University of Michigan and former Wall Street trader, who finally sees an opportunity to apply scientific methods in China's stock and futures markets.

 

"Theoretically, we hope to achieve the same speed as in U.S. markets, transactions occurring in microseconds," Wang said.

And for all of China's rabid, day-trading housewives, security guards, and banana vendors, prepare yourself because the challenge has been issued: 

"China's market is highly inefficient, which means it's relatively easy to produce absolute returns," said Ken Zhu, Chairman and CEO of hedge fund firm Scientific Investment. "Chinese retail investors don't have any advantage over us."

 

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Tue, 06/09/2015 - 19:55 | 6180817 zerofever
zerofever's picture

It can only end in lol and tears.

Tue, 06/09/2015 - 20:04 | 6180829 knukles
knukles's picture

Gleat!  Impolove Riquidity!

Mao is rolling over in his grave and's cutting deals with Lucifer to fuck over the New Cadre.

                               And TPTB get all worried about Ebola.

Tue, 06/09/2015 - 20:12 | 6180861 stant
stant's picture

Tptb that were worried about getting the grass cut cheap. Are now worried about having grass to cut

Tue, 06/09/2015 - 20:40 | 6180935 Divine Wind
Divine Wind's picture

 

 

 

Sum ting vewy wong in this pran.

Tue, 06/09/2015 - 21:51 | 6181113 wee-weed up
wee-weed up's picture

 

 

Yep... "To da moon, Alice!"

(Or whatever the Chinese name for Alice is)

My apologies to the great Jackie Gleason.

Tue, 06/09/2015 - 21:58 | 6181130 nink
nink's picture

> Abacus

> HFT Algo enabled supercomputer

Tue, 06/09/2015 - 22:09 | 6181153 MonetaryApostate
MonetaryApostate's picture

What difference does it make?

Wed, 06/10/2015 - 09:32 | 6182126 HowdyDoody
HowdyDoody's picture

What is the Chinese for transaction tax?

Wed, 06/10/2015 - 01:28 | 6181506 TheRideNeverEnds
TheRideNeverEnds's picture

Yea the problem is as pointed out in the article. The Chinese market is regular people using their own money and credit to trade securities back and forth at an ever increasing rate.

This is not good, leads to volatility and actual price discovery, booms busts in certain issues but ever increasing price as more get in.

The U.S. Has a far better system as pointed out. Here the large majority of action is institutional aka: companies program buying their own stock, various funds program buying their baskets so on. Our market increases therefore at a nice steady 45 degree angle month after month, year after year no risk no worry just buy, on a dip like this week ideally and kick back.

Tue, 06/09/2015 - 20:51 | 6180963 Normalcy Bias
Normalcy Bias's picture

Yep, Mao's thinking '~40 million murdered, and for this?'

I'm sure the next psychopath will get it right...

Tue, 06/09/2015 - 19:55 | 6180820 Cognitive Dissonance
Cognitive Dissonance's picture

So they DID find another pool of greater fools.

Tue, 06/09/2015 - 19:56 | 6180822 THE 4th Quadrant
THE 4th Quadrant's picture

There has to be an underground website publishing the herds daily direction. Let it be known!

Tue, 06/09/2015 - 20:00 | 6180830 Normalcy Bias
Normalcy Bias's picture

Let the buggering in the name of market 'efficiency' begin!

Tue, 06/09/2015 - 20:01 | 6180832 Budnacho
Budnacho's picture

Ah Soooo....Ah Sooo...Ah Fuuuuuuck......

Tue, 06/09/2015 - 20:01 | 6180833 gdiamond22
gdiamond22's picture

Hey Wang relax will ya, it's a parking lot!!!!

Tue, 06/09/2015 - 20:11 | 6180857 i_call_you_my_base
i_call_you_my_base's picture

Madness is contagious.

Tue, 06/09/2015 - 20:11 | 6180858 TheGreatRecovery
TheGreatRecovery's picture

I thought they killed thieves in China.  Careful, Flash Boys!    :-)

Tue, 06/09/2015 - 20:15 | 6180867 kowalli
kowalli's picture

China have 1.5bn people and they are switching dollars for yuan so it's may be not so bad. They should have a spike because of dedollarisation

Tue, 06/09/2015 - 20:16 | 6180871 pachanguero
pachanguero's picture

So nice they are coming to help the CIA crash the Chicom market.......

Tue, 06/09/2015 - 20:32 | 6180907 The Next Millen...
The Next Millennium is Now's picture

Uncontrollable hilarity will ensue, but beware of evaporation of world liquidity as the Yuan draws all fiat currencies down with the ship.

Tue, 06/09/2015 - 20:38 | 6180928 williambanzai7
williambanzai7's picture

Tue, 06/09/2015 - 20:39 | 6180930 Dindu Nuffins
Dindu Nuffins's picture

 

"China's market is highly inefficient, which means it's relatively easy to produce absolute returns," said Ken Zhu

Zhu in Chinese means pig.

Tue, 06/09/2015 - 20:55 | 6180975 earleflorida
earleflorida's picture

chinese love to gamble

it seems they all have the fever

but, it takes money, which the poor don't have

the newly minted middle-class will fill-the-void

when, and if the market collapses

the chinese will blame you know who

how better to build a nationalistic fevor

lastly, china is both a manufacturing/ agri consumer market

only if china fails first

the ussa certainly has a head start with but a decade since the entirety of america going belly-up

either way, it will be wwiii all over again?

jmo

Tue, 06/09/2015 - 21:11 | 6181030 Depression is Coming
Depression is Coming's picture

This has been happening for 4 years already... NBBO in China is wide, you dont need to be virtu or citadel to mint money daily over their

Tue, 06/09/2015 - 21:20 | 6181047 Pickleton
Pickleton's picture

Chinese bourses have already seen three panics

 

So, isn't one of the predominant theories RE: The Great Collapse, that one market will fail and then the others quickly follow....  Oops, we sorry.  we just yak herders and farmers here.

Tue, 06/09/2015 - 21:27 | 6181060 buzzsaw99
buzzsaw99's picture

now i know i want in

Wed, 06/10/2015 - 05:09 | 6181649 random999
random999's picture

BTFD before its too late! How much can you borrow?

Wed, 06/10/2015 - 08:00 | 6181830 youngman
youngman's picture

Somewhere some big hedge fund or TBTF Investment bank is building a building right next to the Chinese servers to gain that extra millisecond....The Chinese cheat..so do we...

Wed, 06/10/2015 - 08:40 | 6181941 Bobbo
Bobbo's picture

I suppose that counts as an increase in US Exports ?!

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